Colours of migration

Scientists are seeking the gene involved in lighter skin colour in the Native American and East Asian branch of humanity.

Image credit: armennano (CC0)

The variation in skin colour of modern humans is a product of thousands of years of natural selection. All human ancestry can be traced back to African populations, which were dark-skinned to protect them from the intense UV rays of the sun.

Over time, humans spread to other parts of the world, and people in the northern latitudes with lower UV developed lighter skin through natural selection. This was likely driven by a need for vitamin D, which requires UV rays for production.

Separate genetic mechanisms were involved in the evolution of lighter skin in each of the two main branches of human migration: the European branch (which includes peoples on the Indian subcontinent and Europe) and the East Asian branch (which includes East Asia and the Americas).

A variant of the gene SLC24A5 is the primary contributor to lighter skin colour in the European branch, but a corresponding variant driving light skin colour evolution in the East Asian branch remains to be identified.

One obstacle to finding such variants is the high prevalence of European ancestry in most people groups, which makes it difficult to separate the influence of European genes from those of other populations. To overcome this issue, Ang et al. studied a population that had a high proportion of Native American and African ancestors, but a relatively small proportion of European ancestors, the Kalinago people. The Kalinago live on the island of Dominica, one of the last Caribbean islands to be colonised by Europeans.

Ang et al. were able to collect hundreds of skin pigmentation measurements and DNA samples of the Kalinago, to trace the effect of Native American ancestry on skin colour. Genetic analysis confirmed their oral history records of primarily Native American (55%) – one of the highest of any Caribbean population studied to date – compared with African (32%) and European (12%) ancestries.

Native American ancestry had the highest effect on pigmentation and reduced it by more than 20 melanin units, while the European mutations in the genes SLC24A5 and SLC45A2 and an African gene variant for albinism only contributed 5, 4 and 8 melanin units, respectively. However, none of the so far published gene candidates responsible for skin lightening in Native Americans caused a detectable effect. Therefore, the gene responsible for lighter skin in Native Americans/East Asians has yet to be identified.

The work of Ang et al. represents an important step in deciphering the genetic basis of lighter skin colour in Native Americans or East Asians. A better understanding of the genetics of skin pigmentation may help to identify why, for example, East Asians are less susceptible to melanoma than Europeans, despite both having a lighter skin colour. It may also further acceptance of how variations in human skin tones are the result of human migration, random genetic variation, and natural selection for pigmentation in different solar environments.